Cyber Employment 2024: Sky-High Expectations Fail Businesses & Job Seekers

  /     /     /  
Publicated : 23/11/2024   Category : security


Cyber Employment 2024: Sky-High Expectations Fail Businesses & Job Seekers


Unreasonable requirements, low salaries, and a lack of commitment to training leaves businesses unable to hire their perfect cybersecurity pros. So, is there really a workforce shortage?



Well-publicized estimates of a massive shortfall in cybersecurity workers have resulted in high expectations among job seekers in the field, but the reality often falls flat, because of a mismatch between companies requirements and job seekers skill sets.
It raises the question: Is the so-called cyber-worker shortage a real phenomenon that will dog companies in 2024?
On one hand, companies report facing difficulties in hiring knowledgeable cybersecurity professionals, with enough
workers to satisfy only 72% of the demand
, according to data provided by labor analyst firm Lightcast — a shortfall of nearly a half-million workers. But job seekers say that companies have unreasonable education, experience, and salary expectations. For example, the vast majority of job postings — about 85% — call for at least a bachelors degree in computer science, cybersecurity, or other technical discipline, when historically only about
60% to 70% of cybersecurity workers have a college degree
.
The result is that cybersecurity job seekers with the right education, technical skills, credentials, and professional network — what Lightcast calls mercenaries — have little problem getting hired, but the lions share of hopefuls are finding less success, says Will Markow, vice president of applied research for the labor-data firm.
Theres an expectations gap that I think is leading to a lot of the confusion around whether or not there really is a talent shortage in cybersecurity, he says. We often see, for example, that employers are requesting cybersecurity workers with a minimum of three- to five-years of prior work experience for jobs that probably could be performed by an entry-level worker.
The situation has left job seekers lashing out at companies, citing additional concerns to boot, like overly long interview processes and a lack of commitment to training. In a series of articles on Medium, for example, Ben Rothke, a New York-based information security manager,
took umbrage with claims
that there are millions of open cybersecurity jobs in need of filling, with no workers to join the workforce.
Theres also the question of salaries for the lucky few who do fit corporate requirements.
People I know who are looking to find a position are struggling, and these are people with experience, he tells Dark Reading. There is a shortage because good, highly technical people are hard to find, but there is also the issue that a lot of companies dont want to pay for people; they are just not paying, and Id say thats the cause of probably half of the hiring issues.
One example: Many cybersecurity certifications require a minimum of five years of prior work experience — a CISSP certification, for example — but about 20% of cybersecurity job postings requiring such certifications are for entry-level, lower-paid jobs needing less than two years of experience, according to Lightcasts Markow.
The mismatch between employers and job seekers has resulted in cybersecurity experts questioning the data. 
While a shortage is defined as a lack of supply to fulfill demand, both of those quantities are very cloudy in the field of cybersecurity. For companies — the demand side of the equation — cybersecurity needs could be filled with a full-time employee, a third-party service, or potentially a product. And as discussed, the supply of available workers depends on worker skills and company requirements.
For those reasons, gauging the current cybersecurity workforce situation in the United States is difficult. There are currently about 1.2 million cybersecurity workers in the United States and about 570,000 cybersecurity-related jobs posted in the last year,
according to Cyberseek
, a information site collaboration between Lightcast, certification organization CompTIA, and the National Institute of Standards and Technologys
National Institute for Cybersecurity Education (NICE)
. Lightcast de-duplicates jobs across multiple boards and tries to weed out job openings that are never filled. 
Cybersecurity certification providers ISC2 has similar numbers,
estimating that there are 1.5 million cybersecurity workers
in North America, with a shortfall of 522,000 workers, which results in 74% of demand being met.
However, with roughly 165 million workers in the US,
according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics
, that means that about one in every 140 workers is responsible for cybersecurity as some part of their job description — a number that sounds high. In reality, only about 20% to 40% of those 1.2 million workers is a core cybersecurity worker — one that would have a title related to cybersecurity, says Lightcasts Markow.
So those are folks like infosec analysts, cybersecurity architects and engineers, and CISOs, he says. But then theres also what we call the cybersecurity-enabled workforce, and this usually encompasses a broader set of IT roles — and, in some cases, non-IT roles as well — who dont have cybersecurity as the core responsibility of their jobs.
To expand their supply, companies should relax their requirements and
look for workers who want to learn
, rather than those who already have specific skills or credentials, says Lee Kushner, a former technical and cybersecurity recruiter of more than two decades. Hard technical skills — such as coding, architecture, infrastructure, specific technologies, and understanding how to secure them — remain in short supply.
When it comes down to people with average skills, people who do not have very strong technical backgrounds, people who can talk about security, but not really do anything — we have tons of those people, and nobody really wants to hire them, he says. People who really understand cloud security, product security; people that are really strong in how security works with engineering teams — thats really whats lacking.
A major issue is that
training opportunities are in short supply
, and companies do not want to necessarily invest in workers to give them the right skills. In addition, companies are often seeking unicorn cybersecurity skill sets, such as someone who is fluent in cloud security but also has a knowledge of the companys core business (retail, lets say), along with multiple certifications, a decade of experience, and the ability to be a people person.
Because the measure of cybersecurity job openings and demand are lagging behind the situation on the ground, recent tightening of budgets has meant that the job market is worse today than a year ago. 
High interest and inflation have taken a bite out of budgets, and companies are now starting to think more about cutting into their cybersecurity departments, even though some threats — such as ransomware — appear to be on the rise. A year ago, when fears of a recessions still dominated,
only 10% of executives predicted cutting their cybersecurity workforce
. Today, recession fears may be abating, but nearly half of executives expect to cut security workers, says Clar Rosso, CEO of certification organization ISC2.
Whats the root cause? The easy answer would be that bottom line pressures were far more steep than the executives we surveyed earlier in the year imagined, he says. The crunchier cause might be that regardless of what leaders say, we still have work to do to help them understand the strategic value that cybersecurity plays in their businesses, and what is at risk when they cut cybersecurity resources.
Yet, while cybersecurity often is something that companies attempt to do without, the real world will always remind them that they need it, Lightcasts Markow says.
There continue to be rising geopolitical tensions and uncertainties across the globe, and what weve seen historically is that when there are increases in geopolitical tensions, there are increases in demand for cybersecurity workers as a result of increased threats across the globe, he says.
Between the greater likelihood of a soft economic landing in 2024, and the ever-increasing threat landscape, demand for cybersecurity workers could continue to be strong in 2024, he adds.

Last News

▸ 27 Million South Koreans Hit by Online Gaming Theft. ◂
Discovered: 23/12/2024
Category: security

▸ Homeland Security Background Checks Breach Raises Concerns. ◂
Discovered: 23/12/2024
Category: security

▸ Fully committed to the future world of technology. ◂
Discovered: 23/12/2024
Category: security


Cyber Security Categories
Google Dorks Database
Exploits Vulnerability
Exploit Shellcodes

CVE List
Tools/Apps
News/Aarticles

Phishing Database
Deepfake Detection
Trends/Statistics & Live Infos



Tags:
Cyber Employment 2024: Sky-High Expectations Fail Businesses & Job Seekers